The Politically Speaking podcast team of Jason Rosenbaum and Jo Mannies welcomes state Rep. Stacey Newman, D-Richmond Heights, to this week's show.

Newman, whose 87th district includes some of the region’s most affluent suburbs, discusses at length her ongoing role in two of the state’s most controversial topics: gun rights and photo IDs at the polls.

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Newman’s district includes all of Clayton and parts of Ladue, Richmond Heights and Webster Groves, as well as Washington University and Fontbonne University.

Before beginning her legislative career, Newman was active in progressive politics. She was the founder and executive director of Harriett’s List, a statewide political action committee honoring the legacy of former Lt. Gov. Harriett Woods; the executive director of the Missouri Women’s Coalition; and the women’s vote director for both the Missouri Democratic Party and Democratic National Committee.

Active in pressing for background checks for gun purchases, Newman also participated in the Million Mom March in 2000. Her daughter, Sophie, then 6 years old, attracted national attention that same year in the battle over gun rights when she appeared on Rosie O’Donnell’s TV show.

In the Missouri House, Newman has been a leader in the battle against gun-rights proposals that she believed were dangerous. She also has been an outspoken opponent of the proposed requirement that all voters must show a government-issued photo ID at the polls.

On the podcast, Newman said:

The court fight over Amendment 5, a gun-rights measure approved by voters last fall, reinforces her complaints last year that the measure was poorly written. A lower court has ruled that the constitutional amendment would allow convicted felons to have guns. Newman said that the measure’s sponsors engaged in “clear pandering’’ to the gun industry.

She believes the public has been misled about the consequences of a mandated government-ID for voters. She says it would discriminate against the elderly, the disabled, women and the poor – all of whom are less likely to have a driver’s license, the main form of allowable ID under the proposal. She said that many of the affected voters don’t have access to “the underlying documents’’ – such as birth certificates and marriage licenses – needed to get a government-issued ID.

She doubts that the Missouri state government can come up with the millions of dollars needed to pay for the documents or a driver’s license for people who can’t afford to obtain them. Newman says Republicans pressing the issue are really engaged in “a voter suppression effort’’ to block would-be voters more likely to back Democrats.

She has fond memories of state Auditor Tom Schweich, a Republican who lived in her district. She considered him a friend and recounted their "very warm, neighborly'' relationship.

This week’s episode of Politically Speaking features Missouri Republican Party Chairman John Hancock, who has been under fire for weeks, in a candid conversation with St. Louis Public Radio reporters Jason Rosenbaum and Jo Mannies.